On Monday, the party supply chain pulled the Super Bowl-themed ad — which featured two women talking over a table decorated with Anderson's inflatable snack stadium — and apologized for having one of the women call people who are gluten-free "gross."

Though Party City released a statement assuring viewers that Anderson "was not involved in the creation of this commercial in any way," the "Cooking for Real" star took to Twitter on Tuesday to address the controversy herself.

Imagine having a contract. Then it gets breached making you look bad. They apologize and make sure people know it wasn't you. Then no one cares & people are still mad at you. 🤔 What did I do again? I'm chasing dreams and sometimes there's a roadblock. GUESS WHAT? STILL CHASING.

"Imagine having a contract. Then it gets breached making you look bad. They apologize and make sure people know it wasn't you. Then no one cares & people are still mad at you. What did I do again? I'm chasing dreams and sometimes there's a roadblock. GUESS WHAT? STILL CHASING," Anderson tweeted.

Party City's social media pages were flooded with complaints after the controversial commercial began airing. The ad featured two friends looking over their table of snack options and then to a single stool featuring separate offerings.

Party City's apology, which Anderson shared on Instagram Monday night, read in part, "Party City values its customers above all else, and we take your feedback extremely seriously. We recognize that we made an error in judgment by running the recent Big Game commercial, which was insensitive to people with food allergies."

The company assured viewers it had pulled the commercial from its website and all channels, and vowed to make a donation in support of celiac disease research. Those who suffer from the autoimmune disorder must avoid gluten because it will damage their small intestine.